Privacy fears rise as AI chatbots turn to ads for revenue

Privacy fears rise as AI chatbots turn to ads for revenue

Privacy fears rise as AI chatbots turn to ads for revenue

https://www.trtworld.com/article/a23a95f48aad

Publish Date: 2026-02-15 00:49:00

Source Domain: www.trtworld.com

The introduction of advertisements and sponsored content in chatbots has spawned privacy concerns for AI users as brands scramble to stay relevant in a fast-changing online environment.

ChatGPT developer OpenAI began showing ads in chatbot conversations for free and low-cost users to start balancing its hundreds of billions in spending commitments with new revenue sources.

It swiftly came in for mockery from rival Anthropic, which has staked its reputation on safety and data security.

Anthropic’s advertisement broadcast during last week’s Super Bowl showed a man asking advice from a conversational AI, which then shoehorns advertising copy for a dating site into its otherwise relevant response.

OpenAI boss Sam Altman shot back that the clip was “clearly dishonest”.

Beyond OpenAI, Microsoft has been running contextual ads and sponsored content in its Copilot AI assistant since 2023.

AI search engine Perplexity has been testing ads in the United States since 2024, while Google is also testing ads in the AI “overviews” its namesake search engine has been offering since last year.

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Data privacy

Google has repeatedly denied wanting to run ads in its Gemini chatbot, with Demis Hassabis head of the search giant’s DeepMind AI arm saying that ads “have to be handled very carefully”.

“The most important thing” in AI is “trust in security and privacy, because you want to share potentially your life with that assistant,” he added.

OpenAI has sought to reassure users that ChatGPT’s responses will not be modified by the ads, which are shown alongside conversations rather than being integrated into them.

It has also promised not to sell user data to advertisers.

AI companies are “concerned that selling ads will scare away users,” said Nate Elliott, an analyst with US data firm Emarketer.

But “when it’s free, you’re the product. It’s a risk we’re all more or less aware of already,” said Jerome Malzac of AI consultancy Micropole.

“We accept it because we find value in it.”

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